This is the place where the majority of the warbird (aircraft that have survived military service) discussions will take place. Specialized forums may be added in the new future
Mon Oct 10, 2016 1:09 pm
Here's a question I really should know the answer to (my father was a 27 year AF officer and pilot, I was a 20 year officer)....
We all know initially the USAAF required pilots to have two years of college.
That apparently was dropped during the war to avoid a shortage (which apparently never came to pass since at the end of the war the USAAF was overstocked with pilots and qualified applicants).
-Anyone know when...and if /when the requirement was reinstated?
I was reading a 1959 book about the AF, and it was casually mentioned that the college requirement was dropped.
I know the aviation cadet program existed until the late 50s or early 60s, and I've always assumed the difference between an aviation cadet and a AFROTC or OTS grad and a flying cadet was the cadet did not have a four-year degree. Correct?
Thanks.
Thu Oct 13, 2016 5:29 pm
I went through USAF Pilot training in Class 54G (January 1953-April 1954) 54G was all ex-enlisted men except for one student officer (OCS Graduate, I think). A person could get into Pilot training three ways then 1. Enlist and apply for Pilot training after you were assigned to Basic Airman Training. If accepted and while awaiting a class assignment you were assigned to as a Pre-Cadet to a USAF primary pilot training base as a crew-chief's aide on the flight line refueling the T-6s (which I did). 2. If you had 2 years of college credit or more, you could apply as a civilian and if you were accepted, be assigned directly to a pilot training class (no Pre-Cadet time). If you were already a commissioned officer then you went through as a student officer (flight training only). Status made no difference. You could be washed out of pilot training if you didn't progress satisfactorily--- no RHIP here!
When I graduated I was committed to 3 years of active flight duty which I did as a co-pilot on SAC KC-97 refueling tankers. Then I was off to the airlines for the next 38 years.
Jack Frost
Sat Oct 15, 2016 2:51 pm
Thanks, sounds like a different time.
At some point the USAF and USN decided that to be an officer and pilot you needed a BA, and today if you want to make the military a career, you need a MA.
When did you train? The a.c. used underwent some changes in the early fifties with T-34s being used for initial training, and T-28s replacing Texans.
Being a multi-engined guy, did you get jet time or did you go directly to a twin (I'd guess a TB -25)?
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